Our long-term goal is to define the role for DExD/H box ATPases in pre-mRNA splicing, an essential step in the expression of eukaryotic genes that provides a versatile mechanism for regulating gene expression through splice site choice. Splicing requires eight, conserved DExD/H box ATPases. While such ATPases are thought to remodel RNA in nearly all RNA-dependent process, our understanding of the function and mechanism of this class of molecular motor proteins is poor. Toward a deeper understanding of the role of DExD/H box ATPases in splicing, we have endeavored to define their RNA targets, their mechanisms for rearranging RNA, and their roles in splice site specificity. While fidelity mechanisms have been well-defined at the stages of transcription and translation, at the stage of pre-mRNA splicing our understanding of fidelity mechanisms remains rudimentary. While the majority of spliceosomal DExD/H box ATPases have been implicated in fidelity, we lack a fundamental understanding of how splice site specificity is established by these ATPases. A major roadblock has been the lack of assays for DExD/H box-dependent rejection mechanisms. We have now successfully established assays for rejection at the catalytic stage of splicing, positioning our lab to define the fundamental basis for splicing fidelity. Further, we have recently discovered that these DExD/H box ATPases not only reject suboptimal splice sites but also enable alternative, optimal sites, thus defining these factors as alternative splicing factors that act at the unconventional stage of splicing catalysis. These findings have also yielded insight into the fundamental mechanism by which the spliceosome searches for a 3' splice site. Lastly, while a mechanistic understanding of DExD/H box ATPases in RNA-dependent processes is limited, these proteins have been commonly thought to act by destabilizing RNA-RNA or RNA-protein interactions directly. We have recently discovered evidence for an alternative mode of action in which these ATPases act indirectly by pulling on a strand of RNA to disrupt interactions at a distance. Importantly, this new mode of action would permit a DExD/H box ATPase to disrupt a duplex that would otherwise be inaccessible for direct unwinding mechanisms. To define the role and mechanism of DExD/H box ATPases at the catalytic stage of splicing, we propose to accomplish the following three aims, using a combination of single molecule, biochemical, mathematical, genetic, and genomic approaches in budding yeast. First, we aim to determine the mechanism and consequence of proofreading at the first step of splicing. Second, we aim to define the mechanism of splice site choice at the second step of splicing. Third, we aim to determine the mechanism by which DExD/H box ATPases function at the catalytic stage. This work promises to transform our understanding of the roles of DExD/H box ATPases in splicing and beyond. 1

Public Health Relevance

In an intermediate stage of the expression of our genes into proteins, the workhorses of our cells, interrupting information must be accurately deleted. Errors in this process have been implicated in numerous diseases, including, blindness, neurodegenerative disease, and cancer. A major goal of our work is to determine how errors in this process are prevented to better understand the etiology of disease and how to treat disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01GM062264-14
Application #
9177613
Study Section
Molecular Genetics A Study Section (MGA)
Program Officer
Bender, Michael T
Project Start
2001-03-01
Project End
2020-07-31
Budget Start
2016-09-20
Budget End
2017-07-31
Support Year
14
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
$349,041
Indirect Cost
$121,576
Name
University of Chicago
Department
Genetics
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005421136
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60637
He, Yangzi; Staley, Jonathan P; Andersen, Gregers Rom et al. (2017) Structure of the DEAH/RHA ATPase Prp43p bound to RNA implicates a pair of hairpins and motif Va in translocation along RNA. RNA 23:1110-1124
Qin, Daoming; Huang, Lei; Wlodaver, Alissa et al. (2016) Sequencing of lariat termini in S. cerevisiae reveals 5' splice sites, branch points, and novel splicing events. RNA 22:237-53
Soucek, Sharon; Zeng, Yi; Bellur, Deepti L et al. (2016) The Evolutionarily-conserved Polyadenosine RNA Binding Protein, Nab2, Cooperates with Splicing Machinery to Regulate the Fate of pre-mRNA. Mol Cell Biol :
Semlow, Daniel R; Blanco, Mario R; Walter, Nils G et al. (2016) Spliceosomal DEAH-Box ATPases Remodel Pre-mRNA to Activate Alternative Splice Sites. Cell 164:985-98
Wlodaver, Alissa M; Staley, Jonathan P (2014) The DExD/H-box ATPase Prp2p destabilizes and proofreads the catalytic RNA core of the spliceosome. RNA 20:282-94
Koodathingal, Prakash; Staley, Jonathan P (2013) Splicing fidelity: DEAD/H-box ATPases as molecular clocks. RNA Biol 10:1073-9
Kannan, Ram; Hartnett, Sean; Voelker, Rodger B et al. (2013) Intronic sequence elements impede exon ligation and trigger a discard pathway that yields functional telomerase RNA in fission yeast. Genes Dev 27:627-38
Semlow, Daniel R; Staley, Jonathan P (2012) Staying on message: ensuring fidelity in pre-mRNA splicing. Trends Biochem Sci 37:263-73
Nielsen, Klaus H; Staley, Jonathan P (2012) Spliceosome activation: U4 is the path, stem I is the goal, and Prp8 is the keeper. Let's cheer for the ATPase Brr2! Genes Dev 26:2461-7
Mayas, Rabiah M; Maita, Hiroshi; Semlow, Daniel R et al. (2010) Spliceosome discards intermediates via the DEAH box ATPase Prp43p. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107:10020-5

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